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Iraq denies blocking food to Iranian exile camp

Publisher Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Publication Date 6 August 2009
Cite as Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Iraq denies blocking food to Iranian exile camp, 6 August 2009, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/4a82b72e21.html [accessed 20 May 2023]
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August 06, 2009

As many as 13 Iranian exiles were killed when Iraqi police entered Camp Asraf on July 28.

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Iraq has denied it was preventing food, water, or medical supplies from entering an Iranian exile camp it wants to shut down north of Baghdad.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh denied reports by the camp's residents, the People's Mujahedin Organization of Iran (aka Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization, MKO) dissident group, that its forces had blocked entry of food and water into the camp for at least 10 days.

"That is incorrect.... We do not block food or medical supplies, but we do block building supplies such as cement and metal," Dabbagh said.

Swiss-based human rights activists, including senior UN expert Jean Ziegler, said on August 5 that Iraqi authorities were blocking food and water.

Iraqi forces last week took control of the camp on the Iranian border, home to the MKO for about two decades, sparking clashes with residents in which at least seven exiles were killed. Camp residents said 13 were killed.

Iraqi police arrested 36 Iranian exiles on rioting charges after the clashes.

Iraq has said it wants to close the camp and send residents to Iran or a third country, a proposal they bitterly oppose. The government has not said when it might evict them.

Iraq's Shi'ite-led government, which includes many former opponents of Saddam Hussein who were exiled in Iran, has close ties to Tehran and is unsympathetic to the MKO.

The group began as Islamist leftists against Iran's shah but fell out with Shi'ite clerics who took power in the 1979 revolution.

Iraq, like Iran and the United States, sees the MKO as a terrorist organization. On August 4, Iraq's state security minister said none of the camp's 3,500 residents would be granted asylum in Iraq.

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